Some students, however, expressed concern that the films were shown in classrooms. "I spend all day in class," complains one such student. "The last thing I want to do on a Friday night is go to the MLB to sit in those uncomfortable little chairs. I even start thinking about my professors." "We come here and we dread it all week, so what are we doing here at 10 at night?" asked Dan Bickersteth. Inspiration gave Julie Eisenberg, first-year Art student, the answer: "I know, it's much different to come here with a buzz." A LTHOUGH mediatrics attributes low interest in artsy films to changing tastes, Professor Ira Konigsberg, director of the Program in Film and Video Studies, feels that the desire to see creative cinema never really disappeared. While the Co-op sometimes has trouble drawing crowds, F/V Studies has enjoyed widespread attendance. All year, the F/V Studies Program has organized the Film Classics Series, which shows free films every Sunday night. Wednesday nights students can see films from the Avant Garde film series, shown in conjunction with a F/V class. In February, the Program co-sponsored the Black Filmmakers Series with the Center for African-American and African Studies. The F/V Studies films are far from mainstream, but they have the advantage of exposure through mailings to the F/V Studies students and non-film students who take film courses, and the Program pursues publicity far more aggressively than any of the film societies. They also have the contacts and the educational status to acquire free films from a variety of sources. Because their films usually run in a series, those who attend one film are likely to find out about the others, and are more likely to be interested in coming again to the same sort of film. on the lack of exposure films receive among students, "I think we've always assumed that everyone knew what Current was, that Cinema Guide was now Current, and that everyone was reading it. That's a stupid assumption. The Co-op has been dependent on Cinema Guide, and now Current, for a bulk source of advertising, and the Daily just hasn't shown the kind of interest we'd like." The Co-op admits, however, that they haven't been doing all they can to publicize their events. Name recognition plays significantly in film choice among students. Many find themselves reluctant to see a film they've never heard of, by an unfamiliar director, maybe with a title in a foreign language.' Students may be seeing n mainstream films because that's all they know, so publicity is integral to any event's success. For instance, the F/ V Program's showing of the Yiddish The Dybbuk pulled 1200 film-goers( into the h( Michigan Theater, a success Konigsberg attributes to articles in the Ann Arbor News, the Daily, fliers and consequent word-of-mouth. While recent films stick in students' minds, the smaller, older films need extensive publicity to inform the public. Still, even the Michigan Theater must do fundraising to support itself financially as a not- for-profit organization. Russ Collins, director of programming, asserts "We cannot make money showing movies. We have to raise over $200,000 a year to keep ourselves operating." He characterizes the movie theater business in general as "not very profitable." Konigsberg feels that the film community in Ann Arbor is far from dead. "I've been convinced for the last few years that there is still considerable interest in film in general, and also in alternative cinema. Ann Arbor and the U-M over the years have been one of waiting for good cinema." Though he views the campus cinema situation optimistically, Konigsberg does recognize certain fundamental changes inthe film world at large that have affected the film societies. "Certainlywith the accessibility of films on videotape, it suddenly became just as easy to pick up a film at the store and stay at home." Konigsberg mentions that although the film industry has changed its attitude in packaging its films, the film societies did not respond until it was perhaps too late. At the same time that fees for renting 16 and 35 millimeter films went up, the University began to charge for use of its auditoriums. In the last two years, the auditoriums have been paid for through the university, partly a result of the F/V Studies Program's negotiations. The department is currently trying to convince the University to improve sound systems in the auditoriums. Although the F/ V Studies Program has been in operation for 15 or 16 years, it wasn't until two winters ago that the University decided to review the Program with the idea of phasing it out completely. The Program had begun as a collaborative, inter-disciplinary effort in response to film's rapid rise as the major art form of the 20th century. Different departments, especially English and foreign languages, assured the University that the Program would cost them no money. The Program worked on a shoestring for the next dozen years, until it virtually ran out of energy two years ago. Dean Peter Steiner called for a review of the Program, and assembled a reviewing panel which included prominent film scholars David Bordwell of The University of Wisconsin at 0' ' Turkish film Kite proves refreshing and entel If you happen to bring up Turkish prisons, at least to anyone who has seen the 1978 film Midnight Express, nightmares of filth, degradation, sadism, and lots of other bad things will most likely come to mind. But Turkish director Tunc Basaran wants to change all that with his latest film, Don't Let Them Shoot the Kite, the first Turkish film ever to compete for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Film. According to Basaran, "(Midnight Express) portrayed Turkey and its 60 million citizens in a very bad light throughout the world. There wasn't a single Turk in the picture the audience could sympathize with." In Don't Let Them Shoot the Kite, Basaran does not attempt to glorify Turkey or its penal system, but merely to bring to the screen a group of compelling three-dimensional characters, a sharp contrast to the faceless foreign heavies in many mainstream American films who only appear to look and talk funny and fuck with God-fearing, flag- loving U.S. citizens. The film has already won first prize at the Antalya Golden Orange Film Festival, Turkey's equivalent of the Academy Awards. Its story centers around the friendship between four-year- old Baris (excellently played by real four-year-old Ozan Bilen, who proves that simple childhood innocence can be much more cute than precocious, one-liner- spewing brats) and political prisoner Inci (Nur Surer, who won the Best Actress Golden Orange). Baris is taken into a woman's prison as a baby when his mother is arrested on drug-trafficking charges. This practice is actually fairly common in Turkey, where there are no provisions for the care of children of incarcerated parents. Unlike the uneducated petty criminals, Inci is able to teach Baris about an outside world which he has never experienced. His endless questions about things we take for granted, from circumcision to communism, provide not only humor but an alternative viewpoint of many very silly adult habits. When he asks a soldier guarding a hospital why he is carrying a gun, there is no good answer. The story is based on a novel by Feride Cicekoglu, who also wrote the film's screenplay. The character of Inci is based on Cicekoglu, an architect who was one of the many Turkish artists and intellectuals to be imprisoned during the crackdown on rightist and leftist terrorism after the military takeover of 1980. Don't Let Them Shoot the Kite is a film about hope, one of the few themes that is virtually impossible to overuse. The hope comes in the form of a kite which Baris spots through his narrow view of the outside world in the prison yard. At first he believes that the kite is a strange bird, but Inci explains to him what it really is, and after she is granted amnesty, he be some symt comf to a f most (Se by M I S f >: _ _ sketchpad f~in W 'TN ~CARDb. rTSS oUAVE A TRE WE~B at OE.R~tlJE. SoWELLU, ACCO RDi NGr lb "ftNEW 5o? jata1RLAI AY- FooD SV)C% y.'ou CA'T 14A4 O~Ee ~Now m Wow! Look to the J Shops at Jacobson's for really hot looks to wear to your upcoming spring formals. Great looking party clothes and all the right accessories for a look that shines long after dark! Jc-obsoiis You coul go to the 6mm Ar tstival and you uld see I ely ladie in the buff." Without University subsidy, the film societies must rely on Current and the Daily for publicity the premier communities for film and video interest. But the film community got caught in national trends and tastes. The kinds of films that made this campus unique were just not being shown anymore. I think we're bringing back lots of films that were here some years ago, and we're tapping on a basic concern that's always been here, that is still here, that will continue to be here. This is certainly a community that's been because the cost of fliers and ads is too high. Anita Weiner, president of the Co-op, remarked We welcome Jacobson's Charge, MasterCardt VISAS and America Shop until 9 p.m. on Thursday and Friday. Until 6 p.m. on Monday, Tuesday, WA 1O 84 Mardijil i~go _. ! j 10,0 WEEKEND mardlilkifto